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The foundation myth of St. Petersburg in the city guidebooks: Creating
heritage through mind and emotions
Irina Seits
Södertörn University, Stockholm, Sweden
European University, St. Petersburg, Russia
ORCID: 0000-0001-9467-3019
ABSTRACT: The essay addresses the aspects of heritagization of St. Petersburg history, analyzing the myth of
the city’s foundation from the perspective of the role of emotions and mind in the production of its urban space.
I turn to the guidebooks published in St. Petersburg in the eighteenth- to early twentieth centuries to explore the
paths that the heritagization took in order to construct the narrative and the image of the former Russian capital
Keywords: City guidebooks, Emotions and mind, Heritage, Heritagization, St. Petersburgy
1 INTRODUCTION: THE HERITAGIZATION
OF HISTORY
History conversion into legacy happens in heritagi-
zation when certain historical episodes and moments
are selected to construct a narrative commemorating
and celebrating the past selected to be remembered
in the present, which establishes continuity between
the historical past and connections with its material
artifacts. These artifacts may be art and literary
works that belong to the period celebrated today or
created for or about that time. They serve as illustra-
tions and evidence of the celebrated past, filling
unavoidable narrative gaps and bridging them over
those historical episodes that fall out of the represen-
tative myth of the past, which is being produced
through heritagization. The actual witnesses of the
past, such as natural and architectural monuments,
sometimes require explanation and preservation and
sometimes need to be removed to conceal the past
selected to be forgotten. In this essay, I turn to
St. Petersburg guidebooks from the three centuries
of St. Petersburg history to trace the paths of its her-
itagization into the most enigmatic and phantasma-
goric city of the country.
2 THE FOUNDATION OF ST. PETERSBURG
St. Petersburg is a unique city in many ways, some of
them originating in history and the myth of its foun-
dation. The city was started in 1703 as the capital of
the future Russian Empire, as the establishment of the
country’s new political course, and as annoyance to
the “arrogant neighbor,” as was articulated by the
Russian poet Alexander Pushkin in his 1833 poem
The Bronze Horseman: A St. Petersburg Story.This
poetic novel created a narrative of the foundation of
St. Petersburg as the “Window to the West” opened
by Peter I not only to manifest the victory over
Sweden but to declare the beginning of the new coun-
try and the new history.
Figure 1. The Bronze Horseman monument to Peter the
Great. Author’s collection.
The city lay at the mouth of the Neva River, flow-
ing to the Finnish Gulf of the Baltic Sea, was built
by the will of a single man. The landscapes were the
least favorable to the establishment of a megapolis,
DOI: 10.1201/9780429299070-35 271
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and St. Petersburg became one of the costliest per-
sonal caprices of the Russian Tsar not only by the
unprecedented amount of financial investments but
by the scale of the direct human sacrifice as well.
The dialectic between the rational and the irrational
in the creation of St. Petersburg underlines the whole
history of the city’s existence from its very beginning.
Peter’s mindful understanding of the urgent need to
protect the lands newly gained from Sweden on the
one hand, and an obsessive drive to overcome the
whole multiplicity of natural, political, and financial
challenges in no time and without any hesitation on
the other, resulted in a city, which became one of the
world’s most fascinating and ambiguous creations of
a genius dictator’s brilliant mind, which was driven,
at the same time, by his unchained emotions.
Nikolay Karamzin, the Russian historian, and
writer of the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries, called St. Petersburg a brilliant mistake of
Peter I (Karamzin, 1991, pp. 197-199), sharing similar
impressions from the city expressed by the French
philosopher Denis Diderot after his five-months stay
in St. Petersburg in 1773-74 under the invitation of
Empress Catherine II the Great. Diderot believed that
the capital city, which he described as “unnatural,”
should be moved deeper inland, and that its status
was to be reduced to a regional sea-port, since keep-
ing St. Petersburg the center of the Russian Empire
was like living with a heart out on a fingertip (Mezin,
2012, pp. 70-78; Dzhabbarov, 2018).
Ever since, St. Petersburg, collecting its wealth
and nurturing its beauty, has been expelled to the
constant threat from the West, if only to recall the
devastation of the nine hundred nights-long Siege by
Nazi Germany in the Second World War. The city
remained an attractive bait for its enemies, and yet
all their efforts to conquer it failed, as it was never
defeated nor occupied by external enemies, only if
by those raised within its own urban womb.
THE SPLIT BETWEEN THE RATIONAL AND
THE IRRATIONAL
Fyodor Dostoevsky, engaging with St. Peters-
burg’s space in his literary works (“Dostoevsky’s
St. Petersburg,” - a famous literary cliché in
Russia), revealed this dialectic between the
rational and irrational, the mindful and the psycho-
logical in the city’s character calling it “the most
fantastic” city, meaning it being the most distant
from reality and reason on the one hand, and at the
same time regarding it as the most “abstract and
intentional city on entire globe” in his Notes from
the Underground written in 1864. This ambiguity
resulted in St. Petersburg’sspecific dehumanizing
effect on a “little man” livinginthebigcity that
Dostoevsky and other Russian writers, among
them Nickolay Gogol’, stressed in their works.
This effect of what Dostoevsky calls “official” or
“bureaucratic” St. Petersburg had severe and depress-
ing impact on the state of minds and souls of his char-
acters that were doomed to eternal sufferings and dark
sides of human existence by the very urban conditions
of the “yellow St. Petersburg,” a metaphor that Dosto-
evsky used in describing the maddening space of the
deserted and soulless city in the hot summer days that
had driven Raskolnikov to commit murder in Crime
and Punishment (1866). This metaphor is intensified
by the symbolic reference that the locals draw to one
of the first St. Petersburg mental institutions built in
the classical style in the late 1770s by Italian archi-
tects Giacomo Quarenghi and Luigi Rusca on the
bank of the Fontanka River. The yellow color of its
facades was characteristic of St. Petersburg classicism,
giving locals associations not only to an architectural
style but to the fear of ending up in this institution, as
the “yellow house” still means the “madhouse.”
The intentionality of St. Petersburg is indeed one of
its most distinguishing features. Unlike most cities that
take decades and centuries to grow from a small fort-
ress or a village to a capital, St. Petersburg was planned
from the start. Even though the Emperor issued no spe-
cial decree that transferred the capital from Moscow to
St. Petersburg, it happened de-facto in 1712, just nine
years after its foundation, once all state and govern-
mental institutions moved from Moscow or were
newly re-established in St. Petersburg.
The city that was founded as a fortress to protect
the lands from Sweden in the ongoing Northern war
had to develop the whole complexity of its urban
organism very fast, including the infrastructure of
defense, the communication systems with a new sea-
port at its core, the plants and factories that supplied
the construction sites and provided for the city’s
everyday life, and the gloss of the European capital.
Peter the Great wanted to observe an immediate
metamorphosis of these lands from a deserted
swamp into a paradise of his own imagination in no
time. He was creating his myth of Russia that had
not existed before him and that neither existed after
Figure 2 . Benjamin Patersen. view to the spit of the Vasili-
jevksy Island and the Stock exchange, 1807. From the Her-
mitage museum collection.
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The foundation myth of St. Petersburg in the city guidebooks
him. The city of St. Petersburg was being created
along with the myth of St. Petersburg.
4 THE PRACTICALITY OF MIND AND THE
EMOTIONS OF PASSION
For Peter the Great, the city’s foundation did not
mean merely the new outlay to the Baltic sea with
convenient and well-developed military and trade
routes. It was as much a practical step towards open-
ing a window to Europe as an emotional gesture of
breaking with the previous history of the country
that he inherited and that he saw reflected in the
image of Moscow, which was object of Peter’s per-
sonal disaffection due to some dramatic obstacles of
his childhood.
By founding St. Petersburg, Peter wanted to start
from scratch, leaving his city to the next generations as
a record of his reforms, as a story of his personal suc-
cess. The foundation of St. Petersburg began the new
page of Russian history, and it required a new historical
narrative to be developed immediately to transform the
history of St. Petersburg into the new national heritage.
It should have become the new point of reference, the
new origin of Russian statehood inseparably connected
to the Emperor’s name. The myth of St. Petersburg’s
foundation initiated by Peter I, who came to an appro-
priated and conquered land to begin the new history of
Russia, received its further development in Russian lit-
erary tradition, which in the nineteenth century was
given a poetic form by Alexander Pushkin in “The
Bronze Horseman,” bringing the myth of
St. Petersburg’s foundation to the masses as a valuable
and unquestionable legacy. The myth of the origins of
St. Petersburg that was established on barren marshy
soils as an act of Peter’s passionate will symbolize the
beginning of the new country and the new history, and
since the nineteenth century has become a celebrated
national heritage.
5 CITY GUIDEBOOKS AS THE TOOLS OF
HERITAGIZATION
The genre of guidebooks falls somewhere between the
fiction literature, the fables, the memoirs, the travel
notes, the statistical reports, the historical studies, and
the advertising booklets, usually matching neither of
these. Yet each edition pretends it provides with the
trustworthy and mindful representation of the city it
represents, at the same time promising an emotional
experience and impressions, at the end inevitably fail-
ing to satisfy its reader’s expectations for the both.
However, to study the mythologization of a city’s
history, guidebooks are valuable sources. They pro-
duced and recorded the heritage for the historical
periods when they were published and, at the same
time, once out in the hands of readers, they become
the artifacts of the heritage they helped to construct.
The authority of a guidebook to lead the reader
before, during, and after her visit to an urban space
is enormous as the guidebook directs readers' minds
and emotions towards a particular perception of the
space, setting a historical perspective and adjusting
an ideological optics on historical monuments.
Every guidebook selects and processes the informa-
tion it provides about the city, choosing the most
important and representative of that space. Guide-
books draw our attention to some sites with selected
stories and descriptions and articulate and propagate
the ideology of spaces that we explore. While certain
places are highlighted in a guidebook, other memory
sites and their histories remain outside our reach
simply because they are not mentioned.
There is usually no visible discrepancy between
a story told and an object represented in a guidebook.
A constructed narrative fills a historical object, and
this infiltration turns it into an object of heritage. We
usually overlook this manipulative and administrative
moment of heritagization for the sake of the guilty
pleasure of consuming the entertaining continuity
uncritically that a good guidebook introduces, hence
buying a spoiled history wrapped in the shiny tinsel
of heritage.
The heritage is hence administrable, as long as it is
distinguished from history, which is understood as
a domain where some evidence of the truth resides,
and the guidebooks surely offer to explore. David
Lowenthal, a prominent scholar of heritage studies,
outlined a ridge between the history and the heritage in
his book The Heritage Crusade and the Spoils of His-
tory. (1998). Today, after two decades of pursuing the
total commercialization of heritage into the tourist
industry, various guidebooks are significant; distin-
guishing between history and heritage is considered no
less than an axiomatic suggestion and a commonplace.
Even though separation of heritage from history is sub-
jected to marketing and instrumentalization, and while,
to the note by Lowenthal, “these two routes to the past
are habitually confused with each other,” his definition
of the difference between the history and the heritage
remains relevant
In fact, heritage is not history at all; while it bor-
rows from and enlivens historical study, heritage
is not an inquiry into the past but a celebration
of it, not an effort to know what actually hap-
pened but a profession of faith in a past tailored
to present-day purposes (1998, p. X).
City guidebooks as the tools of heritagization of
the past contribute to its mythologization and stereo-
typization. Heritagization in the popular literary
form of a guidebook directs our attention to material
objects that testify to specific historical moments
that find themselves in compliance with the ‘present-
day purposes.’ Even though such heritagization may
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be distortive to history, the objects selected for
observation link the ‘correct’ episodes of history, as
in montage, to produce a continuity necessary for
a historical narrative identified as representative of
the city.
ST. PETERSBURG GUIDEBOOKS: FROM
ACADEMIC STUDIES TO SENTIMENTAL
JOURNEYS
What is said about the genre of tourist guidebooks is
undoubtedly relevant to the hundreds of editions
published on St. Petersburg in the city and beyond
its borders. And yet, the paths of history that the city
had to undertake produced a heritage of extremely
high and intensive ambiguity, imprinted on the pages
of St. Petersburg guidebooks of various epochs.
Thus, the St. Petersburg guidebook study of s in
their continuous and chronological sequence draws
a fascinating timeline of the city’s representation and
imagining, of heritagization of its past and the
mythologization of its present.
The first guidebooks on St. Petersburg appeared
some decades after its foundation and served the
city’sofficial descriptions and statistical reports, at
the same time following the European tradition of
a sentimental journey and travel writing of the era of
Enlightenment. One of the founders of this genre
was Laurence Sterne, who wrote A Sentimental Jour-
ney Through France and Italy, first published in
1768, initiating the genre fashion. In St. Petersburg,
the first publication that outlined the standards and
criteria for guidebooks for many decades ahead
appeared in 1779, during the reign of Empress Cath-
erine II the Great. Andrey Ivanovich Bogdanov,
a historian and bibliographer of the Russian Acad-
emy of Sciences, had collected and processed enor-
mous data on the history of St. Petersburg and the
various aspects of the capital’s life since its founda-
tion in 1703 and till 1751. He created the encyclope-
dia of the city, giving equal attention to its historical
background, the state of industries, governmental
institutions, geographical features, descriptions of
natural landscapes, weather, of the citizens’ charac-
ters, traditions of various classes, celebrations, and
statistical information, medical institutions, and
economy.
The Historical, Geographical, and Topographical
Description of St. Petersburg, from its foundation in
1703 till 1751 (Bogdanov, 1779) was created with
the pedantry of a bibliographer and archival researcher
whose main goal was to introduce an objective and
rational study that could be used as a source on the his-
tory of St. Petersburg for many decades ahead. At the
same time, Bogdanov, a pioneer in the field that in
some hundred years developed into a sustainable
research area of “Peterburgology,” had no illusions on
the urgency of his work when he finished it, admitting
that “this historical description of mine, seemingly not
very necessary, yet will be of a need to the next gener-
ation and will be called at their service” (Pukinsky,
1974, p. 224). Bogdanov’s fundamental study that was
filled with love for the new heart of the Russian
Empire and with fascination before the miracle of its
unprecedented beauty that grew in a few decades in
front of his eyes was first published nearly thirty years
later, in 1779, long past the author’s death.
Bogdanov’s work set a high standard for further
authors, and the following guidebook published by
an academic historian, Doctor of Medicine, and sci-
entist Johann Gottlieb Georgy, in 1794, was intro-
duced to Empress Catherine already as a precious
and appreciated gift. Georgy attracted the whole
team of researchers and experts from various depart-
ments to collect data on all sides of St. Petersburg’s
life.
Georgy engages with the history of the foundation
of St. Petersburg that was outlined by the struggle
with Sweden for the lands that Peter turned to Eldor-
ado immediately after winning them. He describes
the factories that were founded to supply the city and
the institutions that were developed; he was proud of
the beautiful palaces and architectural ensembles and
provided with the detailed description of the treas-
ures of the Hermitage – the world’s top collection of
paintings, jewelry, and ancient rarities that was
established by Catherine the Great in her Winter
Palace in St. Petersburg.
Figure 3. View to the Royal winter palace and the spit of
Vasylievsky Island. Photo by Grigory Brazhnik. Courtesy
of the photographer.
And yet Georgy, an experienced scientist of the
Enlightenment, a celebrated member of Academies of
Sciences of Russia and Prussia, a member of the Free
Economic Society in St. Petersburg and The Berlin
Society of Investigators of Nature places his main
focus on his own impressions from the life in the city
instead of a scientific data. He expresses his emotions
freely when, being a world explorer, he finds
St. Petersburg one of the most liberal places on Earth,
where foreigners live together with the Russians
274
The foundation myth of St. Petersburg in the city guidebooks
enjoying the freedom of enterprise, starting their busi-
nesses and affairs and observing international indus-
trialists growing rich while enjoying the benefits set
by Peter I for the foreign merchants to attract inter-
national capital to the city and stimulate the economy
(Georgy, 1794, p. 164).
He is fascinated by what he finds as the absolute
freedom with compliance to the law that exists in
St. Petersburg, characterizing citizens by their end-
less hospitality, the tendency towards constant
changes and everything new, as well as by their pas-
sion for regalia and high social status (Georgy, 1794,
p. 656). He notes that the foreigners benefit from the
unlimited religious tolerance that Peter I stimulated
by preserving the right of all non-Russian Orthodox
permanent and temporary residents to worship their
religions and build their churches (Georgy, 1794,
p. 661).
Even though Georgy’s study is written in Russian
in an entertaining style to all Russian society classes,
his primary addressee was the Empress in a role of
a voyager. Georgy imagined Catherine the Great
came to the city from far away and needed to under-
stand the nature of this brilliant environment; hence
the shift towards an idealized image of the city and
the focus on the benefits that were enjoyed mainly
by the upper and middle classes of the Russian soci-
ety, which, it should be noted, constituted a large
part of the population of the capital at that time.
This tendency towards addressing a stroller,
a stranger, whether she comes from provincial
Russia or a foreign land, started prevailing in the
city guidebooks since the beginning of the nine-
teenth century. The existence of the eighteenth-
century literature corpus on the history and high-
lights of St. Petersburg that had set the guidelines for
this kind of edition continued in the format of multi-
hundred-pages encyclopedias for travelers and locals
that could be used for decades. Yet, the targeted
audience was not exclusively the royal court and the
nobility anymore, but the people of all classes, as
guidebooks started giving tips for the variety of
places to eat, stay, and spend free time depending on
the reader’s budget and the class without offending
those of the ‘humble financial generosity.’
The 1843 Guidebook on St. Petersburg and Its
Suburbs by Ivan Pushkaryov already represents the
classical edition that fully employed idealized stereo-
types on the freedoms, tolerance, and hospitality of
St. Petersburg citizens, the happy life of the foreign-
ers, and the luxury of the capital’s dolce vita. The
accent shifts from the statistical data on health,
industrial production, and historical background to
the contemporary urban space in all its complexity.
However, the St. Petersburg foundation myth, born
on the empty marshy soils by the will of Peter the
Great, was already well incarnated into the city’s
legacy.
These trends remained and developed throughout
the nineteenth century, adjusting to the growing flow
of business travelers and tourists from various
regions of the Russian Empire and the world, which
increased dramatically at the turn of the century due
to modern communication means.
At the beginning of the twentieth century and
until the 1917 Revolutions, tourism was a well-
established industry in St. Petersburg and many
other parts of the Russian Empire. A publisher,
a tour guide, and entrepreneur Grigory Mosckvich
produced a series of guidebooks on different Russian
cities and regions, offering package tours around the
country for various classes and budgets. In the
last year before the Revolution, he wrote and pub-
lished a guidebook with a classical title Petrograd
and Its Environs (Moskvich, 1916) as St. Petersburg
was renamed into Petrograd, which was a mere
translation of its German name into Russian in
response to the break of the World War I. Along
with providing the detailed information on where to
stay and dine, on how to negotiate the cost of a cab
and save on the tips to servants, he throws his
readers on to the Nevsky prospect – the main street
and the face of the city right upon their arrival to the
central train station. In a lively and emotional
manner, Moskvich describes the move, the drive,
and the noise on the Nevsky, letting his readers fill
the pulse of Petrograd, the main nerve of the country
(Moskvich, 1916, p. III).
Figure 4. View to the Nevsky prospect. Photo by Irina
Seits.
7 CONCLUSION: GONE WITH THE WIND OF
CHANGE
Nevertheless, what fascinates me the most in all
guidebooks of this time is that none of them felt
a breeze of a catastrophe that in a matter of months
grew on the wild wind of the Bolshevik Revolution,
that stormed away the image of the city that was cre-
ated through the minds and emotions, blowing the
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Part II – Architecture/urbanism/design
city’s memory of itself down to the ashes. After the
October Revolution of 1917, the paradigm change
was so enormous that it burnt down all bridges
between the new city of Leningrad and the old glori-
ous St. Petersburg-Petrograd. Between 1917 and up
until the end of the civil war in 1922, guidebooks
were not published. The history of St. Petersburg was
at large prohibited, and its heritage was destroyed to
the ground as it was flesh and blood of the defeated
Imperialism. The new foundation myth of Leningrad
was fabricated in the 1920s, which required building
an entirely new vocabulary and finding the new
points of reference to rest the new heritage upon. In
the following decades of the Soviet power, the re-
appropriation of the Leningrad’s heritage revealed the
very complex and challenging nature of ‘the most
unnatural city’ that, despite all its ambiguity, remained
a brilliant creation of mind and emotions, resurrecting
its heritage from oblivion once again at the end of the
twentieth century. However, that is yet a different
story and a different myth.
At present, the St. Petersburg foundation myth
formed in the first two centuries of its existence is
well protected, maintained, and administrated. It is
itself a heritage. Even though this myth is distin-
guished from the historical truth, it is nonetheless
valuable on its own account. If to cite Lowenthal
again, “heritage and history are closely linked but
they serve quite different purposes.” (1998, p. 104).
The purpose of the guidebooks of all times is to intro-
duceacity’s highlights and lifestyles and to glorify an
appropriate and relevant past, which itself serves as
an introduction and the beginning to the glorious pre-
sent, establishing time bridges between then and now,
and providing with material evidence to the continuity
or inherited legacy of present affairs, addressing both
minds and emotions of their possessors.
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